Convection
To determine the specific heat capacity of a liquid using an electrical heating method, you can measure the change in temperature of the liquid when a known amount of electrical energy is supplied. By using the formula Q = mcΔT (where Q is the heat energy supplied, m is the mass of the liquid, c is the specific heat capacity, and ΔT is the temperature change), you can calculate the specific heat capacity of the liquid.
Heat travels from a solid to a liquid through the process of conduction, where kinetic energy is transferred between adjacent particles within the material. As heat is added, the particles within the solid vibrate more rapidly, which eventually increases the temperature to the melting point of the solid, causing it to transition into a liquid state.
The type of heat transfer that travels through space in electromagnetic waves is called radiation.
Heat travels through a metal pan through conduction, where thermal energy is transferred from the heat source to the pan by direct contact. The metal pan's high thermal conductivity allows the heat to spread quickly and evenly across its surface, heating up the food or liquid inside.
A material that heat travels through easily is copper, due to its high thermal conductivity. This means that heat can move quickly through copper, making it a good material for applications where heat transfer is important.
Yes, but more travels through liquids by convection.
Heat is when molocuels vibrate or when two things rub against each other and create friction, which makes heat. The way heat travels... Conduction: Heat that travels through a liquid or gas Radiation: Heat that travels through as waves Convection: Heat that moves through a solid Hope I helped... :)
Heat travels through liquids with heat radio waves. And the radio waves will eventually warm up the liquid.
Heat travels through empty spaces by radiation.
Heat travels through empty spaces by radiation.
convection
Convection, where the heat warms the liquid and this warmer part changes places with the colder part. Also conduction, where the heat moves from one part of the liquid to another.
the answer is that it travels by conduction. thank you.
How fast heat travels depends upon which method it uses to travel (conduction/ convection/radiation) and what it is travelling through (metal/air/water etc.). heat travels much more quickly through metal because metals are good thermal conductors.
Heat travels through vacuum as electromagnetic radiation, exactly the same way that light and radio do.
thermal heat
yes the heat goes through the bar and ends up through it